wildlife conservation society

Beavers: Dam Good For Songbirds

ScienceDaily  Thu, 10/09/2008 - 09:45

The songbird has a friend in the beaver. According to a study by the Wildlife Conservation Society, the busy beaver's signature dams provide critical habitat for a variety of migratory songbirds, particularly in the semi-arid interior of the West.


 

Veterinarians Adapt Human Tests For Monkeys

ScienceDaily  Wed, 08/13/2008 - 01:30

A medical test developed to detect an overload of iron in humans has recently been adapted to screen for the condition in some distant relatives: diminutive monkeys from South America, according to veterinarians at the Wildlife Conservation Society.


 

Newly Discovered Monkey Is Threatened With Extinction

ScienceDaily  Fri, 08/01/2008 - 23:30

Just three years after it was discovered, a new species of monkey is threatened with extinction according to the Wildlife Conservation Society, which recently published the first-ever census of the endangered primate.

Africa's 'kipunji' hovers at 1,100 individuals.


 

Protecting The Wild Cousin Of Llama, The Guanacos, In Chile

ScienceDaily  Mon, 06/16/2008 - 09:00

The Wildlife Conservation Society has launched a study in Chile's Karukinka reserve on Tierra del Fuego to help protect the guanaco -- a wild cousin of the llama that once roamed in vast herds from the Andean Plateau to the steppes of Patagonia.


 

When Bears Steal Human Food, Mom's Not To Blame

ScienceDaily  Fri, 05/09/2008 - 11:15

Researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society found that the black bears that become habituated to human food and garbage may not be learning these behaviors exclusively from their mothers, as widely assumed.

Bears that steal human food sources are just as likely to form these habits on their own or pick them up from unrelated, "bad influence" bears.


 

Rare Musk Ox May Be Threatened By Climate Change

ScienceDaily  Sun, 04/27/2008 - 13:00

The Wildlife Conservation Society recently launched a four-year study to determine if climate change is affecting populations of a quintessential Arctic denizen: the rare musk ox.

The research team will be assessing how musk ox are faring in areas along the Chukchi and northern Bering Seas, and the extent to which snow and icing events, disease, and possibly predation may be driving populations.


 

World's Rarest Gorilla Finds Sanctuary

ScienceDaily  Fri, 04/18/2008 - 23:00

The government of Cameroon --- with guidance from the Wildlife Conservation Society --- has created the world's first sanctuary exclusively for the Cross River gorilla, the world's rarest kind of great ape.

Classified as Critically Endangered by IUCN's Red List, the Cross River gorilla is the rarest of the four subspecies of gorilla.

The entire population numbers under 300 individuals across its entire range, which consists of 11 scattered sites in Cameroon and Nigeria.


 

Asian Waterbirds Stage Remarkable Comeback

ScienceDaily  Tue, 04/08/2008 - 04:00

According to a new report by the Wildlife Conservation Society, several species of rare waterbirds from Cambodia's famed Tonle Sap region have staged remarkable comebacks, thanks to a project involving a single team of park rangers to provide 24-hour protection to breeding colonies.


 

Scientists find mercury threatens next generation of loons

EurekAlert! - Chemistry, Physics and Materials Sciences  Mon, 03/03/2008 - 23:00

A long-term study by the Wildlife Conservation Society, the BioDiversity Research Institute, and other organizations has found and confirmed that environmental mercury -- much of which comes from human-generated emissions -- is impacting both the health and reproductive success of common loons in the Northeast.